1. Prevalence of communication disorders in HIV-infected adults.
- Author
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Kallail KJ, Downs D, Scherz J, Sweet D, and Zackula RE
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Hearing Loss virology, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Prevalence, Communication Disorders virology, HIV Infections physiopathology
- Abstract
Few adult patients with HIV/AIDS are evaluated for communication disorders. A broad inventory of the communication disorders was obtained in a convenience sample of 82 adult HIV/AIDS patients who presented for medical appointments. Each participant underwent a head and neck exam and a communications skills evaluation. Speech, language, and cognition were assessed using a 10-item test battery. A 14-item hearing test battery was conducted in a separate session. The primary outcomes were the presence and degree of communication disorders. Head and neck exams revealed 40% with ear-related issues. Only 2 participants showed normal findings on all 24 communication skills assessments. Four demonstrated normal findings on all speech-language-cognitive assessments, whereas 8 had normal findings on the complete hearing test battery. A relatively high prevalence of cognitive and language deficits and central auditory disturbances were found. Clinicians must recognize the potential for communication deficits even in a relatively healthy patient with HIV.
- Published
- 2014
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